Clinical Outcome of Kidney Retransplantation.
- Author:
Yong Ki PARK
1
;
Dae Hyeon YOON
;
Yong Hun SHIN
;
Kwon Jo IM
;
Keong Duk SUH
;
Bok Kyoo GAM
;
Ik Deuk JANG
;
Mi Sun KIM
;
Joong Kyoung KIM
;
Si Rhae LEE
;
Kil Huh HYEON
;
Sung KIM
;
Chul Soo YOON
;
Young Soo PARK
Author Information
1. Department of Internal Medicine, Bong Saeng Hospital, Pusan, Korea.
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords:
Kidney;
Retransplantation;
CsA
- MeSH:
Dialysis;
Female;
Glomerulonephritis;
Graft Survival;
Humans;
Immunosuppressive Agents;
Incidence;
Kidney Failure, Chronic;
Kidney Transplantation;
Kidney*;
Male;
Rupture;
Sex Distribution;
Tissue Donors;
Transplants
- From:The Journal of the Korean Society for Transplantation
1999;13(1):87-92
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
Renal transplantation is the optimal treatment for end stage renal disease and it has been improved through the development of operative methods and immunosuppressants. However some patients must receive dialysis or undergo retransplantation after a loss of the primary graft due to rejection or other causes. Recently the frequency of retransplantation has begun to increase gradually. Some articles have reported that retransplantation results do not significantly differ in comparison with initial transplantation results when living related donor kidneys are used. Our study focused on the outcome of 445 first transplantation and 12 retransplantation cases. The sex distribution of retransplanted patients was 11 male and 1 female. The mean age (yrs) for recipients was 32.3 at the first transplantation and 39.1 at the retransplantation. The underlying causes of end stage renal disease were presumed to be chronic glomerulonephritis in all retransplantion patients; the mean duration of graft survival (mo) for first transplantation was 77.92. The causes of previous graft failure were as follows: 10 due to chronic rejection, 1 due to recurrent glomerulonephritis, 1 resulted from a graft rupture due to a motorcar accident. The interval (mo) between graft failure and retransplantation averaged 6.7 and 9 out of 12 patients underwent regrafting within 1 year of their previous graft loss. Recipient-donor relationships in first transplantations were as follows: 9 were living related and 3 were living non-related. Recipient-donor relationships in second transplantations were as follows: 4 were living related and 8 were living non-related. Acute rejection within 1 month of transplantation occurred in 4 primary transplantation patients and 2 retransplantation patients. The incidence of acute rejection within 1 month was as follows: 23% of 445 first renal transplantation patients, 16.7% of 12 second transplantation patients. The 1 year and 2 year graft survival rate was 100% and the mean survival duration (mo) was 33 for retransp